ADVISORIES
GEM
SEVERITY
CVSS v3.x: 8.0 (High)
PATCHED VERSIONS
- >= 0.11.0
DESCRIPTION
The Faye::WebSocket::Client
class uses the EM::Connection#start_tls
method in EventMachine to implement the TLS handshake whenever a wss:
URL
is used for the connection. This method does not implement certificate
verification by default, meaning that it does not check that the server presents
a valid and trusted TLS certificate for the expected hostname. That means that
any wss:
connection made using this library is vulnerable to a
man-in-the-middle attack, since it does not confirm the identity of the server
it is connected to.
This has been a requested feature in EventMachine for many years now; see for
example #275, #378, and #814. In June 2020, em-http-request
published an advisory related to this problem and fixed it by implementing
TLS verification in their own codebase; although EventMachine does not
implement certificate verification itself, it provides an extension point for
the caller to implement it, called ssl_verify_peer
. Based on this
implementation, we have incorporated similar functionality into faye-websocket
for Ruby, such that we use the OpenSSL
module to perform two checks:
- The chain of certificates presented by the server is valid and ultimately trusted by your root certificate set – either your system default root certificates, or a set provided at runtime
- The final certificate presented by the server is valid for the hostname used in the request URI; if the connection is made via a proxy we use the hostname from the request, not the proxy's hostname
After implementing verification in v1.1.6, em-http-request has elected to leave
the :verify_peer
option switched off by default. We have decided to enable
this option by default in faye-websocket, but are publishing a minor release
with added functionality for configuring it. We are mindful of the fact that
this may break existing programs, but we consider it much more important that
all clients have TLS verification turned on by default. A client that is not
carrying out verification is either:
- talking to the expected server, and will not break under this change
- being attacked, and would benefit from being alerted to this fact
- deliberately talking to a server that would be rejected by verification
The latter case includes situations like talking to a non-public server using a
self-signed certificate. We consider this use case to be "working by accident",
rather than functionality that was actively supported, and it should be properly
and explicitly supported instead. To that end, we have added two new options to
the Faye::WebSocket::Client
constructor: tls.root_cert_file
, and
tls.verify_peer
.
The :root_cert_file
option lets you provide a different set of root
certificates in situations where you don't want to use your system's default
root certificates to verify the remote host. It should be a path or an array of
paths identifying the certificates to use instead of the defaults.
client = Faye::WebSocket::Client.new('wss://example.com/', [], tls: {
root_cert_file: 'path/to/certificate.pem'
})
The :verify_peer
option lets you turn verification off entirely. This should
be a last resort and we recommend using the :root_cert_file
option if
possible.
client = Faye::WebSocket::Client.new('wss://example.com/', [], tls: {
verify_peer: false
})
To get the new behaviour, please upgrade to v0.11.0 of the Rubygems
package. There are, unfortunately, no workarounds for this issue, as you
cannot enable :verify_peer
in EventMachine unless the calling library contains
an implementation of ssl_verify_peer
that actually checks the server's
certificates.
For further background information on this issue, please see faye#524 and faye-websocket#129. We would like to thank Tero Marttila and Daniel Morsing for providing invaluable assistance and feedback on this issue.